Development Fees

The first submittal of plans shall include two (2) copies of the water improvementplan, and one (1) copy of the grading/drainage or pavement plan showing topographic information (if possible). Subsequent submittals shall include only one (1) copy of the water improvement plans. Legal descriptions and drawings for public water easement should accompany a subsequent submittal, after alignments have been determined. Signing materials and electronic versions of the plans at plan approval are outlined on the Plan Review Fee form.

Plan submittals shall include:

Copy of the Plan Review Fee form, filled out with applicable fees. The project number is assigned during the first submittal.

Copies of materials as specified above for the type of submittal.

Plan Revision or Re-Approval Fees (covers fees for each plan revision or re-approval)

Plan revision or re-approval submittals shall include a completed Plan Review Fee formand one (1) copy of the applicable revision sheet(s). Once approved, revisions and re-approvals shall require the same form of signing materials and electronic versions of the plans as required at plan approval.

CONSTRUCTION

Inspection Fees (covers fees for infrastructure and backflow inspection, and are due at time of water construction permit issuance)

Attached copy of the contractor's bid for construction of the public water portion of the project (exclude private portion of the water service and fire service work)

Infrastructure Inspection Fees - 2.5% of the construction cost for the public system (water mains, fire hydrants and water services up to the meter and excluding private fire services after the public valve).

Protected Facilities Fees (covers fees for connection to protected facilities, when applicable, and are also due at the time of water construction permit issuance)

Fire Flow Impact Fees - The District has established impact fees for the La Cholla Corridor area and the Cortaro Farms Road Corridor area to ensure that adequate fire flow exists in those localities. The District financed system development improvements in the La Cholla Corridor and Cortaro Farms Road Corridor. It will recover its cost as developers of vacant parcels within the impact areas are required to pay the impact fees. Developers have been positive about the establishment of such an impact fee because development could not occur without adequate fire flow. This impact program helped finance the new Magee/La Cholla Reservoir and a 12" water main along Cortaro Farms Road. Fire Flow Impact Fees are based on gross acreage and land use (commercial, multi-family, or residential), and will be included on the coversheet of water improvement plans, if applicable. See MDWID Resolution 1994-8 orMDWID Resolution 1996-6.

Payment of Protected Facilities Fees, included with the Permitting Fees (above), if desired.

WATER SERVICE CONNECTION

Water Service Connection Fees - All Service Areas (to establish water meter connections, due when application is made for a meter):

The District charges a water service connection fee to all new customers purchasing a meter or connecting to the system. This includes a meter fee, a water resource fee, and a system development fee. For a standard single family residential home, the total connection fee cost for a standard 5/8-inch meter is $2,372.05.

CustomerClass

Meter Size

Meter Fee

Water Resource Fee

System Development Fee

TotalFee

Single Family,Residential,Commercial,Industrial,Multi-Family,Apartments,Condos, andTownhomes

Note: Installation of a given meter size, per the Water Service Connection Fees above, assumes a water service line exists either equaling or exceeding the size meter desired. If a water service line does not exist for a meter, or is of smaller diameter than the desired meter size, a new water service line will need to be installed. All costs for installation of a new or larger water service line are the customer's responsibility. The customer is also responsible for all work to construct or connect the private side, from the water meter to the house or structure.

Meter Fee - The meter fee represents the cost of materials and labor to purchase and install a given meter size.

Water Resource Fee - The water resource fee is intended to have new development contribute to the acquisition of the District's water allocation to meet current and future needs. These fees equate to how much the District anticipates the added capacity will cost for additional Central Arizona Project water allocation per acre foot for the holding and capital costs..

System Development Fee - The District was the first water provider in the region as well as one of the first public entities to require developers to contribute to infrastructure upgrades associated with growth through the payment of a system development fee. The Board has maintained a policy of not having growth negatively affect existing customers' needs; and thus, supports the system development fees.

Fees for Upsizing and Downsizing Meters - A meter is either upsized or downsized when it is determined either more or less capacity is necessary (e.g. more capacity for a combination domestic and private fire sprinkler system), or to switch to a meter size that is the more cost-effective for current or intended usage.

Fees for upsizing or downsizing meters shall adhere to the following:

Upsizing Fee – the difference in the Total Fee between the sizes listed in the Water Service Connection Fee schedule (above), for the added capacity of the larger meter.

Downsizing Fee – the Meter Fee listed in the Water Service Connection Fee schedule of size meter desired (above), for the materials and labor on the new replacement meter.

Note: Upsizing a meter assumes the water service line feeding the meter is a least as large as the size meter desired. If this is not the case, a larger water service line will need to also be installed prior to the upsizing of the meter. All costs for installation of a new or larger water service line would be the customer's responsibility, as well as reconnection of the private system after upsizing or downsizing of the meter occurs.

For all inquiries or assistance related to the above, please contact our general Engineering mailbox.

Metro Water increased its storage capacity of 4.5 million gallons in 1992 to over 16.5 million gallons in 2008. More storage increases overall reliability... More>